A method of calibrating a phased array including an array of antenna elements, rf communication circuits each of which is electrically coupled to a different corresponding antenna element within the array of antenna elements, and a signal feed network that electrically couples a first signal line to second signal lines, wherein each second signal line is electrically coupled to a different corresponding rf communication circuit among the rf communication circuits, the method involving: performing a first phase of a calibration operation, the first phase of the calibration operation involving calibrating the signal feed network independent of the rf communication circuits; and performing a second phase of the calibration operation, the second phase of the calibration operation involving calibrating, independent of the signal feed network, each of the rf communication circuits until all rf communication circuits among the rf communication circuits are calibrated.
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1. A phased antenna array system comprising:
a signal feed network that electrically couples a first signal line to a plurality of second signal lines;
an array of antenna elements;
a plurality of rf communication circuits, each rf communication circuit of the plurality of rf communication circuits having a first port and a second port with said first port electrically connected to a different corresponding second signal line among the plurality of second signal lines of the signal feed network and said second port electrically connected to a different corresponding antenna element within the array of antenna elements;
a plurality of calibration circuits equal in number to the plurality of rf communication circuits, each electrically connected to and for calibrating, independent of the signal feed network, a different corresponding rf communication circuit among the plurality of rf communication circuits;
a processor system programmed to execute a calibration operation during which the processor system uses each calibration circuit to perform measurements on its connected rf communication circuit and generate calibration correction data from the measurements; and
a plurality of switches controlled by the processor system for electrically connecting and disconnecting each of the plurality of rf communication circuits from its corresponding second signal line of the signal feed network.
13. A phased antenna array system comprising:
a signal feed network that electrically couples a first signal line to a plurality of second signal lines;
an array of antenna elements;
a plurality of rf communication circuits, each rf communication circuit of the plurality of rf communication circuits having a first port and a second port with said first port electrically connected to a different corresponding second signal line among the plurality of second signal lines of the signal feed network and said second port electrically connected to a different corresponding antenna element within the array of antenna elements; and
a plurality of calibration circuits equal in number to the plurality of rf communication circuits, each electrically connected to and for calibrating, independent of the signal feed network, a different corresponding rf communication circuit among the plurality of rf communication circuits, wherein each calibration circuit among the plurality of calibration circuits comprises:
a reference signal output line for introducing a reference signal into the rf communication circuit connected to that calibration circuit;
a monitoring line for receiving from the rf communication circuit connected to that calibration circuit an output signal resulting from the reference signal introduced into that rf communication circuit; and
a magnitude calibrating circuit for generating a magnitude correction for that rf communication circuit, wherein the magnitude correction for that calibration circuit is derived from the reference and output signals for that calibration circuit.
2. The phased antenna array system of
3. The phased antenna array system of
4. The phased antenna array system of
5. The phased antenna array system of
an rf mixer;
rf front end circuitry electrically connected to the antenna element;
phase adjusting circuitry for adjusting phase of a signal passing through that rf communication circuit;
a communication signal line for carrying a communication signal between an external signaling network and that rf communication circuit; and
an LO signal line for receiving a local oscillator (LO) signal for the rf mixer.
6. A phased antenna array system of
a signal feed network that electrically couples a first signal line to a plurality of second signal lines;
an array of antenna elements;
a plurality of rf communication circuits, each rf communication circuit of the plurality of rf communication circuits having a first port and a second port with said first port electrically connected to a different corresponding second signal line among the plurality of second signal lines of the signal feed network and said second port electrically connected to a different corresponding antenna element within the array of antenna elements; and
a plurality of calibration circuits equal in number to the plurality of rf communication circuits, each electrically connected to and for calibrating, independent of the signal feed network, a different corresponding rf communication circuit among the plurality of rf communication circuits, wherein each calibration circuit among the plurality of calibration circuits comprises:
a reference signal output line for introducing a reference signal into the rf communication circuit connected to that calibration circuit;
a monitoring line for receiving from the rf communication circuit connected to that calibration circuit an output signal resulting from the reference signal introduced into that rf communication circuit; and
a phase calibrating circuit for generating a phase correction for that rf communication circuit, wherein the phase correction for that calibration circuit is derived from the reference and output signals for that calibration circuit.
7. The phased antenna array system of
8. The phased antenna array system of
9. The phased antenna array system of
10. The phased antenna array system of
11. The phased antenna array system of
12. The phased antenna array system of
a magnitude calibrating circuit for generating a magnitude correction for that rf communication circuit, wherein the magnitude correction for that calibration circuit is derived from the reference and output signals for that calibration circuit.
14. The phased antenna array system of
15. The phased antenna array system of
16. The phased antenna array system of
17. The phased antenna array system of
18. The phased antenna array system of
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This application is a Divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/259,265, filed on Sep. 8, 2016, which claims the priority filing date of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/216,592, filed on Sep. 10, 2015. The contents of each of the above-referenced applications is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to the calibration of active arrays, such as phased antenna arrays of the type that are used in communications systems.
Active arrays are complex electronic devices used extensively in military radars and communications. In addition, they are also found in some nonmilitary systems such as in equipment for weather forecast, space communications, and air-traffic control. In general, active arrays are very beneficial in systems where they replace critical mechanical operation with purely electrical operation. For example, the dish antenna of a conventional radar has a precise 3D geometrical design to generate a single narrow beam while an active array can generate multiple narrow beams with a planar construct. More importantly, one can change the beam direction of a dish antenna only by rotating the antenna in space appropriately but one changes the beam directions of an active array through electrical means alone without any mechanical movement. Therefore, the active array replaces mechanical beam forming and steering with electrical beam forming and steering. An important added benefit is a great increase in beam steering agility as electronic steering is substantially faster than mechanical steering. While physical laws of mechanical movement limit mechanical steering, electrical steering operates at the speed of electronic processing. The active arrays form and steer beams by phase shifting and magnitude scaling coherent signals applied to multiple radiating elements.
Despite the advantages mentioned above, the use of active arrays has been limited to high-end systems due a very high cost of manufacturing. Recently, in U.S. Pat. No. 8,611,959, all of which is incorporated herein by reference, a new method for designing low-cost active arrays has been described with potential wide-ranging commercial applications in cellular system, WiFi networks, and other wireless networks. Adding such low-cost active arrays to the wireless infrastructure will enable the capability to generate high-quality communication channels via electronically steerable beams. These beams may be directed in accordance with the mobile traffic density (e.g., see U.S. Ser. No. 14/799,935, filed Jul. 15, 2015, and entitled “Method of Adaptive Beam Placement in Wireless Systems,” incorporated herein by reference) or may scan the service area rapidly (e.g., see US Patent Publication 2012/0258754, entitled “Technique for Achieving High Average Spectrum Efficiency in a Wireless System, also incorporated herein by reference) to increase the network capacity significantly in both cases. This capacity boosting effect is enhanced if the beams are narrow, as generated by active arrays with a large number of elements. The narrower the beams the higher the quality of the signals exchanged between the base stations and the mobiles. Higher signal quality translates into higher network capacity. In addition, narrow beams allow frequency reuse by spatial division multiplexing, which also increases the system capacity.
A key requirement in the design of active arrays is electrical uniformity of all active elements in the array to maintain coherent and phase stable signals. Without very precise matching of the way elements respond to common electrical stimuli, it is not possible to generate or steer well-defined beams. In typical implementations in use today, high uniformity across the array is accomplished by using expensive architectures, expensive components, expensive assembly methods, and expensive calibration methods.
In order to illustrate the challenges of designing active arrays, consider a radio intended for independent operation, such as the radio inside a cell phone or of a base station. Usually, this radio is required to have excellent performance in terms of overall linearity and noise. However, the signal phase shifts due to time delays through the various radio components such as mixers, amplifiers, filters, etc. are of little relevance and can vary widely and randomly from unit to unit because they do not affect the performance of the system. In other words, if a large number of cell phone radios were tested for end-to-end signal phase shifting (signals delays), very few if any would have equal characteristics. Nevertheless, each cell phone radio works correctly as a single radio. Even the overall gain characteristic of the radio may vary moderately without a major loss in system performance.
The case of an active array is fundamentally different from the case above because all radios in the array must have the same overall phase and gain characteristics to a high degree of precision. This is a stringent design constraint, especially if the array must operate in wide environmental conditions, as is usually the case. Typically, in current art, the array electrical uniformity is realized by first building the radios with architectures and components, which have stable characteristics over wide environmental conditions. In addition, the array architecture includes means for adjusting the overall phase and magnitude characteristics of every array element to be able to compensate for unpredictable manufacturing and operational variations. Lastly, the array is calibrated during fabrication and often is re-calibrated at regular scheduled maintenance intervals. Re-calibration is necessary because in most cases the array electrical uniformity deteriorates slowly in time due to operation and environmental conditions.
Naturally, the design approach described above for conventional active arrays yields high manufacturing and maintenance costs. U.S. Pat. No. 8,611,959 discloses methods to design active arrays, which are significantly lower cost than conventional arrays due to their unique simplified architecture. However, the performance of even these arrays is susceptible to degradation due to manufacturing and operational variations such as temperature, humidity, and aging. Here we disclose methods to calibrate these arrays efficiently and automatically. Some of these methods can be applied without interrupting the normal operation of the array. Furthermore, these methods can be also applied to many other active arrays, including some conventional arrays such as digital arrays.
Embodiments of the present invention include methods and systems for calibrating phased arrays automatically before starting normal operation and during normal operation.
In general, in one aspect, at least one of the inventions features a method of calibrating a phased array including an array of antenna elements, a plurality of RF communication circuits each of which is electrically coupled to a different corresponding antenna element within the array of antenna elements, and a signal feed network that electrically couples a first signal line to a plurality of second signal lines, wherein each second signal line of the plurality of second signal lines is electrically coupled to a different corresponding RF communication circuit among the plurality of RF communication circuits. The method involves: performing a first phase of a calibration operation, the first phase of the calibration operation involving calibrating the signal feed network independent of the plurality of RF communication circuits; and performing a second phase of the calibration operation, the second phase of the calibration operation involving calibrating, independent of the signal feed network, each of the plurality of the RF communication circuits until all RF communication circuits among the plurality of RF communication circuits are calibrated.
Other embodiments include one or more of the following features. The method also involves repeatedly performing the second phase of the calibration operation without repeating the first phase of the calibration operation. The method involves performing the second phase of the calibration operation at pre-determined time intervals or performing the second phase of the calibration operation whenever a predetermined change in the environment of the phased array is detected. Calibrating the signal feed network involves determining a phase correction and/or a magnitude correction for each of the plurality of second signal lines and then applying the phase corrections and/or magnitude corrections for the plurality of second lines to the phased array. Calibrating each of the RF communication circuits among the plurality of RF communication circuits involves determining a phase correction and/or a magnitude correction for each of the RF communication circuits and then applying the phase corrections and/or magnitude corrections for the plurality of RF communication circuits to the phased array.
Still other embodiments include one or more of the following features. The signal feed network is a signal distribution network and each RF communication circuit among the plurality of RF communication circuits is an RF transmission circuit for driving the antenna element to which that RF communication circuit is electrically coupled. Alternatively, the signal feed network is a signal aggregation network and each RF communication circuit among the plurality of RF communication circuits is an RF receive module for processing a signal received by the antenna element to which that RF communication circuit is electrically coupled. Each RF communication circuit among the plurality of RF communication circuits includes at least one of a mixer for up-converting an IF signal received from the distribution network to RF and a mixer for down-converting an RF signal received from the antenna element coupled to that RF communication circuit to IF. During the second phase of the calibration operation, calibrating only a subset of the plurality RF communication circuit at a time, wherein each subset is at least one but less than all of the RF communication circuits among the plurality of RF communication circuits. In some embodiments, each subset includes only one RF communication circuit. During the second phase of the calibration operation, electrically disconnecting any RF communication circuit that is being calibrated from the signaling network while that RF communication circuit is being calibrated.
In general, in yet another aspect, at least one of the inventions features a phased antenna array system including: a signal feed network that electrically couples a first signal line to a plurality of second signal lines; an array of antenna elements; a plurality of RF communication circuits, each RF communication circuit of the plurality of RF communication circuits having a first port and a second port with the first port electrically connected to a different corresponding second signal line among the plurality of second signal lines of the signal feed network and the second port electrically connected to a different corresponding antenna element within the array of antenna elements; and a plurality of calibration circuits equal in number to the plurality of RF communication circuits, each electrically connected to and for calibrating, independent of the signal feed network, a different corresponding RF communication circuit among the plurality of RF communication circuits.
Other embodiments include one or more of the following features. The phased antenna array system of claim 20, further includes a plurality of switches, each of which is associated with a different RF communication circuit among the plurality of RF communication circuits and each of which is for electrically connecting and disconnecting its associated RF communication circuit from the corresponding second signal line to which that RF communication circuit is electrically connected. The phased antenna array also includes a processor system programmed to execute a calibration operation during which the processor system uses each calibration circuit to perform measurements on its connected RF communication circuit and generate calibration correction data from the measurements. The processor system is programmed to sequence through the plurality of RF communication circuits by selecting one subset of the plurality of RF communication circuits at a time and, for each selected subset of RF communication circuits, use the calibration circuits for the selected subset of RF communication circuits to calibrate the selected RF communication circuits, until all of the plurality of RF communication circuits are calibrated, and wherein each of the selected subsets includes at least one but less than all of the plurality of RF communication circuits. The processor system is also programmed to sequence through all of the plurality of RF communication circuits by selecting one of the plurality of RF communication circuits at a time and, for that selected RF communication circuit, use the calibration circuit for that selected RF communication circuit to calibrate that selected RF communication circuit, until all of the plurality of RF communication circuits are calibrated. The processor system is programmed to cause the switches to electrically disconnect each RF communication circuit of the plurality of RF communication circuit from its corresponding second signal line of the signal feed network when that RF communication circuit is being calibrated.
Still other embodiments include one or more of the following features. Each calibration circuit among the plurality of calibration circuits includes: a reference signal output line for introducing a reference signal into the RF communication circuit connected to that calibration circuit; a monitoring line for receiving from the RF communication circuit connected to that calibration circuit an output signal resulting from the reference signal introduced into that RF communication circuit; and a phase calibrating circuit for generating a phase correction for that RF communication circuit, wherein the phase correction for that calibration circuit is derived from the reference and output signals for that calibration circuit. Each calibration circuit among the plurality of calibration circuits further includes: a magnitude calibrating circuit for generating a magnitude correction for that RF communication circuit, wherein the magnitude correction for that calibration circuit is derived from the reference and output signals for that calibration circuit. Each RF communication circuit of the plurality of RF communication circuits includes: an RF mixer; RF front end circuitry electrically connected to the antenna element; phase adjusting circuitry for adjusting phase of a signal passing through that RF communication circuit; a communication signal line for carrying a communication signal between an external signaling network and that RF communication circuit; and an LO signal line for receiving a local oscillator (LO) signal for the RF mixer.
The details of one or more embodiments of the inventions are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the inventions will be apparent from the description and the drawings, and from the claims.
Conventional Analog Active Arrays
Typical active antenna arrays contain a plurality of antenna elements placed on a grid, which may be linear, planar, or conformal to a surface. The physical separation of the antenna elements is related to the frequency of operation of the array and very often equals half the average wavelength of the signals transmitted or received. This is necessary for the array to generate narrow beams with low side lobes. Since typical arrays have a large number of elements, they are fundamentally large electrical systems. In other words, the size of the array system is large with respect to the Radio Frequency (RF) wavelengths used.
The Tx/Rx Modules 2340 in
The architecture of the active array in
The diagram of a multiple channel Tx/Rx Module 234 is shown in
The architecture of the active array in
Yet another architectural possibility represented equally by the diagram of
Typically, each Tx/Rx Module 234 is an electrically small system (physical size on the same order of magnitude or smaller than the RF wavelength) but when a plurality of Tx/Rx Modules are placed behind the antenna elements in the array, a large active electrical system is created. For the conventional analog array of
Here we discussed the usual case where the distribution/aggregation network (e.g. corporate feed) paths have the same electrical length but distribution/aggregation networks with paths, which have different electrical lengths can also be used as long as the differences in these lengths are taken into account when programming the phase shifts in the Tx/Rx Modules.
Conventional End-to-End Active Array Calibration
Even when the distribution/aggregation network 5 in
The typical methods for calibrating conventional arrays are shown in
The receiver case shown in
Notice that both in the transmitter and receiver cases, these end-to-end calibration processes compensate for the total phase/magnitude errors of each end-to-end path, which are the sums of errors occurring in the distribution network and the Tx/Rx Modules. The total compensation values obtained this way cannot be separated into compensation values for the distribution network and compensation values for the Tx/Rx Modules. However, if the distribution network has negligible errors, as is often the case with high quality corporate feeds the compensation values result only from the Tx/Rx Module errors. Nevertheless, a major limitation of these end-to-end calibration techniques is that during calibration all normal operation of the array must be stopped because a portion of any signal path to be calibrated is shared by all signal paths (e.g. the distribution network).
The conventional end-to-end array calibration method described in this section relies on using an accurate calibration network 100, carefully built and manually tuned to generate equal signals 101 in the system of
The implementation of the array compensation after calibration may be done with hardware means such as adjusting delay lines or gain stages or with software means by calculating the necessary phase and magnitude values for the Tx/Rx Modules, which compensate the array errors in addition to generating the desired radiation pattern.
A new calibration method for active arrays, which yields economical implementations suitable for inclusion into the array, is described below. In addition, this method allows automatic calibration of the front end of the array system without interrupting the normal operation of the array.
Analog Arrays with IF Feed
One shortcoming of moving the mixer 7 from the schematic in
The array in
Calibrating the Tx/Rx Modules
For the purpose of this section, we assume that all signal paths of the array in
For the transmit phase calibration case shown in
The receive phase calibration case shown in
For the transmit gain calibration case shown in
The receive gain calibration case shown in
In practice there are many possible implementations for the calibration principles illustrated in
The Tx/Rx Module transmitter calibration procedure is as follows. After the array controller (e.g. baseband processor) initializes the calibration, the calibration control block 14b turns on the IF reference signal from the IF Signal Reference Generator 14a. The IF reference signal generator 14a in
The coupler 15 applies the RF reference signal coming from the RF-FE 2 also to the RF mixer 16, which down converts it back to IF such that phase comparison with the original IF reference signal coming from the generator 14a is possible (phases can be compared only when the signals have the same frequency). The IF mixer 17 compares the phases of the two IF signals by multiplication and generates a DC signal equal to cos(ϕk−ϕ2), where ϕ1 and ϕ2 are the respective phases. This DC value is zero when the phases of the two IF signals differ by (2n−1) π/2 radians, where n is any integer (most important n=1) and is a maximum or minimum when the phases of the two IF signals differ by (2n) π/2 radians. This phase detection scheme has 180-degree monotonicity, which is large enough to capture all practical phase errors. The phase calibrating circuit 18 rotates the phase of the LO signal driving mixer 7, through the phase rotator 3 until the DC generated by the mixer 17 reaches a specific set value, preferably zero or a maximum/minimum. These preferred values (zero or maximum/minimum) are important in practice because they are relative values with respect to all other DC values generated by the mixer 17 and therefore are easy to detect and are insensitive to circuit variations. After the phase calibrating circuit reaches the desired state, the signal delay through the Tx/Rx Module transmit path corresponds to a predetermined phase difference such as 90 degrees (zero DC value at output of mixer 17) or 180 degrees (minimum DC value at output of mixer 17). It is important to notice that gain calibration should precede phase calibration because changing the gain of the Tx/Rx Module can also change the phase while phase changes do not affect the gain.
In all cases of Tx/Rx Module calibration (phase or magnitude), the calibration values for the phase rotator 3 and the gains stage 4 may be processed locally at the Tx/Rx Module level or globally at the array control level residing usually in the baseband processor 10 (see
Calibrating the Distribution/Aggregation Network
Next, we remove the assumption made in the previous section that for the array in
In practice, the networks 5 in
Due to operation at a much lower frequency than RF, the network 5 can be designed to be low cost and still maintain low phase/magnitude variations over temperature and other operational conditions. This is usually the case even for a simple serial distribution/aggregation network as in
The first calibration method for the distribution/aggregation network 5 is illustrated in
Next to each node A, B . . . H where the Tx/Rx Modules connect to the two networks 5 we place additional Loop-Back circuits 6d. Under the control 405 of the baseband processor 10, these circuits can loop back any signal coming from the transmit distribution network into the corresponding terminal of the receive aggregation network. The calibration process is as follows. The baseband processor 10 transmits an IF signal 401 through the transmit distribution network and successively requests a single Loop-Back circuit at a time to return this signal back through the receive aggregation network. For each roundtrip transmission, the baseband processor 10 measures the roundtrip phase and magnitude characteristics of the combined transmit/receive paths. After all roundtrip measurements are done, the baseband processor 10 compares expected and measured values and assigns portions of the measured values to each network 5 (transmit or receive) according to various criteria. For example, if simulations showed that a total roundtrip phase difference is divided into 60% for the transmit path and 40% for the receive path, the actual measured phase shift is assigned in the same proportions. Another criterion for value assignment may be derived from lab measurements of the above ratios. Once the actual characteristics of the transmit and the receive networks 5 are known, the baseband processor 10 adjusts the settings of the phase rotators 3 and gains stages 4 to equalize all paths. The case of multiple channels is similar with the additional possibility of measuring many combinations of forward and return paths.
The roundtrip calibration method of
For correct magnitude calibration using the techniques illustrated in
A typical implementation of the circuit 6c of
In one application of the method described in
In another application of the method described in
Arrays with Two-Stage Calibration
The possibility to calibrate the Tx/Rx Modules and the distribution network of the array in
The conventional array subsystems in
The subsystems in
The two-stage calibration of the array system in
Each stage of the two-stage calibration process described in this section addresses a different part of the array, reacting to environmental conditions differently than the other part. The Tx/Rx Modules, which are calibrated during the second stage, are generally quite sensitive to environmental conditions because they contain active circuits. However, the differences between the signal paths from the baseband processor to the Tx/Rx Modules, which are calibrated out during the first stage of the two-stage calibration process, are often invariant over environmental conditions, especially if the distribution network 702 in
Two-Stage Active Array Calibration without Interrupting the Array Operation
An important advantage of an active array over a single element active system is that if one or a limited number of the array elements stops working, the impact in the overall performance of the array is minimum or even unnoticeable. For example, if one element in a phased array with 100 elements turns off, only 1% of the total transmitted power is lost (assuming equal power in all elements) and the radiation patterns remains practically unchanged. One can benefit from this fact by using the two-stage calibration process described here to calibrate an active array without interrupting its normal operation. A possible procedure follows.
At startup (boot time), the active array is calibrated fully through the first stage and the second stage, including the calibration of all Tx/Rx Modules. This ensures that the errors due to manufacturing variations and other factors are eliminated for the operating conditions existing at that moment. Then, the active array is placed in normal operation. At certain prescribed times or prompted by monitored environmental changes, etc. the Tx/Rx Modules are recalibrated (stage-two calibration repeated) one at a time while the rest of the array remain functioning. In some situations, more than one Tx/Rx Module may be calibrated at one time. In addition, in certain cases (e.g. highly variable environments or highly sensitive components) a continuous Tx/Rx Module calibration in round-robin fashion may be necessary. In this way, the array will maintain practically error free conditions over long periods.
As described so far, the two-stage calibration method maintains normal array operation during second-stage calibration but interrupts normal operation during first-stage calibration. This limitation can be removed by adding to the architecture in
Two-Stage Calibration of Digital Arrays
The two-stage calibration method can be used as well in digital arrays.
The two-stage calibration for the digital array in
Calibration Algorithm
In the described embodiment, the baseband processor executes a program that performs the two-stage calibration operation described above. Alternatively, another processor or multiple processors may be used that are located proximate to the Tx/Rx circuits, or are located elsewhere. In the following, we will refer to the programmed entity that controls and carries out the calibration of the phased array as the processor system.
A flow chart of the operation of the processor system is shown in
Referring to
After the selected path is calibrated, the processor system checks whether there are any remaining signal paths within the distribution/aggregation network that have not yet been calibrated (2016). If there are paths that have not yet been calibrated, the processor system cycles through those uncalibrated signal paths, calibrating each in turn (see blocks 2016, 2018, and 2014) until it has completely calibrated the distribution/aggregation network. At that point, the processor system exits this subroutine (2020) and returns to the main program loop shown in
After returning to the main program loop, the processor system calls the second stage of the calibration subroutine during which it calibrates the Tx/Rx circuits independent of the distribution/aggregation network (2002). During this stage of the calibration operation, the details of which are shown in
After the selected Tx/Rx circuit is calibrated, the processor system checks whether there are any remaining Tx/Rx circuits within the array that have not yet been calibrated (2036). If there are Tx/Rx circuits that have not yet been calibrated, the processor system cycles through those uncalibrated Tx/Rx circuits, calibrating each in turn (see blocks 2036, 2038, and 2034) until it has completely calibrated all of the Tx/Rx circuits in the array. At that point, the processor system exits (2040) the second stage calibration subroutine and returns to the main program loop shown in
Next, the processor system enters a loop during which it first checks for the occurrence of any conditions that require the processor system to again perform either the first stage of the calibration operation (2004) or the second stage of the calibration operation (2006). The condition might be a command from an operator, which is more likely the approach that would be used for invoking the first stage of the calibration operation, or it might be the expiration of a timer, or it might be a detected change in an environmental condition such as, but not limited to, the temperature of the array, humidity of the environment in which it is operating, etc., or it might be a detected degradation in the performance of the array, or any combination of such considerations or factors.
As noted before, since the distribution/aggregation network is a much more stable part of the phased array system for the frequencies at which it operates, the times at which it will need to be calibrated will be infrequent. In contrast, the Tx/Rx circuits will need to be recalibrated often, especially if the array is operating in an environment in which conditions (e.g. temperature, humidity, etc.) change often. So, in practice the processor system will repeat the second stage of the calibration operation many times before again executing the first stage of the calibration operation.
Though we have described the calibration of Tx/Rx circuits as being performed one at a time and in sequence, this need not be the case. Multiple Tx/Rx circuits can be calibrated simultaneously. Recall that when a Tx/Rx circuit is being calibrated, it is removed from the active array and cannot be used to transmit or receive communication signals. In a phased array with many antenna elements, the removal of a single Tx/Rx circuit during calibration is not likely to have much adverse impact on the performance of the array. If the array is large enough, the degradation in performance resulting from removing multiple Tx/Rx circuits might prove to be acceptable. Consequently, in that case it would make sense to calibrate multiple Tx/Rx circuit simultaneously to shorten the time it takes to completely perform the second stage of the calibration process.
Other embodiments are within the following claims.
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